First Trust Co. of St. Paul State Bank v. Reynolds

137 F.2d 518, 31 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 432, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 2838
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 13, 1943
Docket12514
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 137 F.2d 518 (First Trust Co. of St. Paul State Bank v. Reynolds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Trust Co. of St. Paul State Bank v. Reynolds, 137 F.2d 518, 31 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 432, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 2838 (8th Cir. 1943).

Opinion

JOHNSEN, Circuit Judge.

The question here is whether a bequest to charity, in order to be deductible for estate tax purposes under section 303(a) (3) of the Revenue Act of 1926, as amended, 1 and in force in 1937, must have a legal reality in the will, or whether it is sufficient if it ba possessed of a practical probability under the conditions of the will and is in fact effectuated by subsequent events outside the legal reach or mandate of the will.

The question arises in connection with the will and estate of the late Frank B. Kellogg, who was at one time Secretary of State in the Cabinet of President Coolidge, and who died in 1937. Mr. Kellogg’s will contained a number of specific bequests and made his wife, Clara M. Kel *520 logg, the unconditional beneficiary of his residuary estate. Among the specific bequests was one of $100,000 to the Protestant Episcopal Cathedral Foundation of the District of Columbia and one of $25,000 to the University of Minnesota, hut it was provided ■ that these charitable bequests should, “wholly or in part, and as to any one * * * of them, become valid and effectual only in case and to the extent that, after the death of said Frank B. Kellogg and prior to the date set by the Probate Court for hearing on the final account and for distribution of the estate, said Clara M. Kellogg shall give her express consent in writing, duly acknowledged before an officer authorized to administer oaths, as to such gifts and bequests that shall become effective out of the estate of said Frank B. Kellogg, and in the absence of such express consent by said Clara M. Kellogg, the * * * bequests * * * shall be and are hereby revoked by said Frank B. Kellogg.”

The reason stated in the will for the condition imposed on the bequests was that “the extent to which the estate of said Frank B. Kellogg may decrease in value or be disposed of by him in his lifetime cannot be anticipated, and he desires to make the most ample provisions for said Clara M. Kellogg during her lifetime, and reposes perfect confidence in her judgment and fairness in the premises.”

Within nine months after Mr. Kellogg’s death, and six months prior to the filing of the required estate tax return, and fifteen months before the date set for hearing on final account in the probate court, Mrs. Kellogg filed her express consent, in the manner and form provided by the will, to the payment in full of both of the bequests here involved, and the executors shortly thereafter made payment of the amounts of the bequests to the two legatees. In the estate tax return which later was filed, the amounts of the bequests were deducted from the value of the gross estate for tax purposes. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue refused to allow the deductions, on the ground that the bequests were not completed charitable gifts under the will and did not have a legal reality in the instrument, since they were not to become effective except upon Mrs. Kellogg’s wholly discretionary consent to their payment, which consent was outside the legal reach or mandate of the will.

The executors paid the deficiency assessment made by the Commissioner, in the amount of $32,000 and interest, and filed claim for refund. Upon rejection of the claim, they instituted suit in the district court to recover back the payment. The district court, on a trial without a jury, denied the recovery, 2 and this appeal was taken. 3

Appellant argues that the amount of Mr. Kellogg’s residuary estate and Mrs. Kellogg’s own financial situation, as well as the close relationship which always had existed between Mr. and Mrs. Kellogg, made it practically certain that she would give her consent to the payment of the charitable bequests, and that the bequests therefore ought, in effect, to be treated as having had a legal reality in the will, and her subsequent consent should legally be 'related back to the time of Mr. Kellogg’s death.

The record shows that Mr. Kellogg left a residuary estate of more than $620,000, after payment of all the bequests in the will (including the two charitable bequests here involved), taxes and expenses of administration. It indicates also that at the time of her husband’s death Mrs. Kellogg was possessed of property in her own right exceeding $450,000 in value. It appears further that, on the basis of recognized mortality tables, Mrs. Kellogg had a life expectancy ■ of only 5.88 years after Mr. Kellogg’s death.

These circumstances and the close relationship between Mr. and Mrs. Kellogg may, as a practical matter, have created a strong likelihood' or probability that Mrs. Kellogg would give her consent to the payment of the two charitable bequests, but they do not in law constitute data of such certain application and known operation 4 as to give the bequests a legal reality in the will itself.

The deductibility of a charitable bequest for estate tax purposes depends upon the legal completeness or legal certainty of what the testator has himself *521 done or mandated in the will. “The tax is on the act of the testator”, and the legal situation for tax purposes must be ad-measured as it “stood on the day when the testator died.” 5 In order to entitle a charitable bequest to tax deductibility, “the testator and he alone must provide for the charitable bequest”; “it must possess the qualities of a definite command which will define the legal rights of all parties to the property intended to be affected”; and, where “there is no mandatory requirement that anything shall pass from the estate to any charitable institution”, the bequest lacks the legal certainty or reality necessary to entitle it to tax deductibility. 6 This is the settled general rule. 7

A bequest to charity, therefore, which, as in the situation here, is conditioned upon the wholly discretionary consent thereto of a third person after the testator’s death, lacks the legal certainty or reality necessary to entitle it to tax deductibility. Since the consent is outside the legal reach or mandate of the will, the tax situation cannot be affected by the fortuitous circumstance that such third person is likely in fact to give his consent to the bequest, or that he subsequently actually does so. The likelihood of any wholly discretionary consent being given is in law a mere speculation. The fortuitous circumstances in the particular situation or relationship which may influence the giving of such a wholly discretionary consent in an individual case are not, as we have pointed out above, data of such certain application and known operation as to afford the basis for a recognized legal result. And since the situation is to be tested by the testator’s acts and mandate, and by the legal certainties or realities existing on the date of his death, the fact that a wholly discretionary consent to a charitable bequest is subsequently given cannot create a tax deductibility by relation back.

Appellant argues that Article 47 of Regulations 80 8

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Bluebook (online)
137 F.2d 518, 31 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 432, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 2838, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-trust-co-of-st-paul-state-bank-v-reynolds-ca8-1943.